학술논문

College Success Among Students From Disadvantaged Backgrounds: "Poor" and "Rural" Do Not Spell Failure.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice; Nov2021, Vol. 23 Issue 3, p686-698, 13p
Subject
Grade point average
Academic achievement
College students
Poor people
Energy consumption
Rural poor
Language
ISSN
15210251
Abstract
The popular view of students reared in poverty is that they fall short across a wide range of domains relative to their more advantaged peers. In this ongoing longitudinal study, we follow a cohort of college students who come from poverty and were awarded full financial support for four years at a large public research university. The results after two full academic years are striking for the lack of difference in dropout rate and grade point average between these economically disadvantaged students and their college peers. We suggest that it is not poverty per se that leads to poorer college academic performance in such students but rather the demand on their time and energy to meet ongoing financial needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]